Jilin Chemical Fibre Co., Ltd.
000420 · XSHE · Textile Manufacturing · China
Jilin Chemical Fibre Co., Ltd. operates primarily in the chemical and fiber industry, focusing on the production and distribution of viscose staple fiber and viscose filament yarn. These materials serve as essential inputs for a wide range of textile products, impacting industries such as fashion, home textiles, and industrial fabrics. The company's operations are strategically aligned with global trends in sustainable and renewable textiles, offering eco-friendly alternatives to traditional fibers. With its commitment to innovation and quality, Jilin Chemical Fibre Co., Ltd. plays a pivotal role in the supply chain of textile manufacturing, ensuring a consistent provision of high-grade viscose products. As a significant player in the Chinese market, it influences local economic activities and contributes to the global textile industry's shift towards more sustainable practices.
Industry
Textile Manufacturing
Consumer Cyclical sector · China
Coordination
Stories
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This company does not currently pay dividends.
Valuation9
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Supply Chain
Apparel Supply Chain
The apparel supply chain is shaped by three structural constraints that interact to produce its distinctive patterns: garment assembly resists automation because sewing flexible fabric remains a manual task, fashion cycles generate demand changes faster than production can respond, and production continuously migrates toward the lowest-cost labor, creating long fragile chains that span continents.
Cotton Supply Chain
The cotton supply chain moves fiber, yarn, denim, t-shirts, and medical gauze from farm to consumer, shaped by three root constraints: cotton is an annual crop with one harvest per year in each hemisphere, making supply responses slow and weather-dependent; cotton farming requires enormous water inputs concentrated in water-stressed regions; and after ginning, cotton enters a globally fragmented chain of spinning, weaving, dyeing, and assembly spread across different countries, where no single nation controls the full path from fiber to finished garment.